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Amid Kavanaugh Fallout, Book Looks at Presidents, Justices


FILE - Brett Kavanaugh arrives prior to meeting with Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell on Capitol Hill in Washington, July 10, 2018.
Kavanaugh was narrowly confirmed to the Supreme Court on Saturday and will take his seat on the high court this week.
FILE - Brett Kavanaugh arrives prior to meeting with Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell on Capitol Hill in Washington, July 10, 2018. Kavanaugh was narrowly confirmed to the Supreme Court on Saturday and will take his seat on the high court this week.

Mired in the Korean War, President Harry Truman began plotting a federal government takeover of American steel companies to head off a strike. Before he followed through with his plan, he secretly asked Chief Justice Fred Vinson, his close friend and poker buddy, how the Supreme Court might react.

Vinson told his friend not to worry, and Truman proceeded with the takeover. A few months later, the Supreme Court found his actions unconstitutional.

The account is one of several instances of presidents and justices appearing to blur the constitutional separation of powers that appear in a new history of American presidents at war.

That relationship between the White House and the Supreme Court is being examined anew following the bitter confirmation fight over Brett Kavanaugh, who angrily denounced President Donald Trump's political opponents during a Senate hearing.

Kavanaugh, who previously served in President George W. Bush's White House, took the concerns about his appearance of partisanship so seriously that he wrote a Wall Street Journal op-ed on the eve of his confirmation to assert his belief that ``an independent and impartial judiciary is essential to our constitutional republic.'' He blamed some of his partisan rhetoric on the intensity of his confirmation process, which was nearly derailed by sexual assault allegations.

Kavanaugh was narrowly confirmed on Saturday and will take his seat on the high court this week. He was advised closely on his handling of the misconduct allegations by Trump advisers, including White House counsel Don McGahn.

Historian Michael Beschloss, author of "Presidents at War," said Kavanaugh "has been bound pretty closely to the Trump administration over the past few weeks." And he said history provides examples of "why you worry about a justice who is not independent enough of the president."

Beschloss writes about the relationship between President Lyndon B. Johnson and his close friend Abe Fortas, whom he nominated to the high court in 1965. After Fortas was confirmed, he "wound up quietly helping the president write speeches and choose Vietnam bombing targets," Beschloss writes.

The close ties between Johnson and Fortas helped scuttle the latter's nomination to be chief justice after they were revealed to the Senate.

Presidents have also more overtly called on Supreme Court justices to help them in moments of political peril.

After the World War II bombing of Pearl Harbor, President Franklin D. Roosevelt feared that he would be blamed for the attack because he moved the U.S. Pacific Fleet from San Diego to Hawaii. Seeking to get ahead of a congressional investigation, Beschloss writes, Roosevelt tapped Supreme Court Justice Owen Roberts to oversee a supposedly independent commission.

"Roberts was known to be unassertive, which made him subject to the president's importuning," Beschloss writes.

Roberts met privately with Roosevelt at least three times after the commission was announced. His report spared the president and pointed blame at local commanders, Gen. Walter Short and Adm. Husband Kimmel.

Trump White House officials have both praised Kavanaugh's conservative record and argued he will be an impartial justice.

"He should apply the law, not make it up as he goes along," White House counselor Kellyanne Conway said Sunday on ABC's "This Week." "This country is sick and tired of people who make up the law as they go along to fit political agendas or to fit personal predispositions."

Beschloss' book, which will be released this week, examines how eight wartime presidents, from Thomas Jefferson to George W. Bush, dealt with their powers under the Constitution.

He writes extensively about Johnson, who he says became more paranoid and emotionally troubled as the Vietnam War unfolded. He was intently focused on those he viewed as rivals, saying on secret tapes that Martin Luther King, Jr. was "controlled completely" by communists and claiming that Robert Kennedy was paying King to stir up urban riots.

Beschloss also writes that Johnson still hoped Democrats would draft him for their 1968 presidential nomination, despite announcing publicly that he would not seek or accept the nomination. Johnson had planned to be in Chicago, site of his party's convention, for a birthday celebration, but ultimately skipped the gathering after his advisers surmised that the party would not nominate him.

Johnson wound up watching the proceedings on television from his Texas ranch.

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